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Mike3 |
This week my journey through the music of my life took an unusual turn. I say that. In fact it's taken many turns, backwards, forwards and sideways, linking many bits of my life together. This is something of a long and rambling post the twists and turns of which are almost certainly much more interesting to me than to you, and to help you keep up with all those twists and turns I'm going to put some words in bold. Unless you're familiar with my love life, you'll find you soon need them, in order to get all the different Mike's straight in your mind. (There have been three of them and all have died.)
Way back in December I was discussing the musician Johnny Coppin with a friend and mentioned that I used to own a cassette of an album of his, "Forest, Vale and High Blue Hill". It turned out that I had rashly decided to dump all my cassettes prior to moving, including not only this gem but also recordings I'd made of my grandparents reading out loud and other family snippets from the sixties and seventies, all because I was trying to downsize and currently didn't have a cassette player. So much spilt milk.
I tried to find a copy of the album but came up with nothing, even asking various local contacts who all reported that it seemed to be something that was only released on vinyl and cassette.
My third Mike (in a life partner sort of way), who was in fact Mike2 because I met him second, died in 2023. He decreed no funeral or ceremony of any kind, believing as I and his elder son did at the time that the two of us would meet over an expensive bottle of wine to lament his passing. Because of various health issues for both of us this is clearly no longer on the cards, so I'm left without a ritual to mark Mike's passing. I've recently decided to hold a small memorial ceremony (with a celebrant) here at home and have been researching the music we might listen to.
While searching for music for Mike's memorial a week or so ago I thought I'd have one more go on the Johnny Coppin trail. I found his website - but not the album title. As a last step I emailed him to ask if there was a digital version floating out there in the ether somewhere. And discovered that it had been incorporated in another album with the title "The Gloucestershire Collection".
A couple of phone calls, a bank payment and a short wait for Royal Mail and the CD The Gloucestershire Collection was in my hands.
Many of the songs on my original album were based on poems by the Dymock Poets. (You can find out even more about them at Friends of the Dymock Poets and by reading the book by Sean Street, The Dymock Poets. In one of the bizarre turns I mentioned up there ^ Sean Street and his wife are friends of mine! The Dymock poets were from the Forest of Dean, the westermost part of Gloucestershire.
Mike1 (my first husband, who died in 1991) was also a poet and certainly knew about The Dymock Poets. He had an extensive poetry library (around 700 books, I seem to remember) which I'm sorry to say I have severely culled over the years and although he would almost certainly have owned a copy of Sean's book, I find that I no longer do. Forest, Vale and High Blue Hill was released in 1983 and that's when I owned a copy on cassette but again, I no longer have it. Mike1 and I both loved Gloucestershire, although neither of us was native to it, and we frequently used to travel to places near Gloucester to watch the Severn Bore.
Naturally, as soon as the CD arrived I started listening to it and was immediately struck with some regret. For whatever reason (the most likely being the mundane one of no longer playing cassettes) I didn't share the Johnny Coppin songs with Mike3 (who died in 2014). As I listened today I realised how many of them spoke his language. He was a countryman and a true Cotswold Lad. (He used to quip, "I'm a Gloucestershire lad, born and bred: strong in the arm and thick in the 'ed". This last was most certainly untrue!) The poems and the tunes Johnny Coppin set them to were in forms Mike would have appreciated. Being on the autistic spectrum was, I'm sure, why he liked music to have notable structure and tunes and songs to have verses and choruses. The Songs of Gloucestershire deliver both in spades. Mike appreciated the writings of poets who had gone out of fashion, such as Rudyard Kipling (he moved past the possible racism contained in Kipling's poems to appreciate them as having been written of their time.) He would have loved the Dymock Poets if I'd introduced them to him.
I'm so pleased to be able to listen to these songs once again. They speak, no, they sing out of Gloucestershire. I've lived here for nearly 50 years and spent much of my childhood visiting my grandparents in Bourton-on-the-Hill and now consider myself a Gloucestershire lass. I should probably think of buying a fresh copy of Sean's book.
How lovely to be able to listen to that music again, and I’m sorry for the regret that comes with it xx
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